Introduction------------Welcome to Climacs, a project to create a Common Lisp version ofEmacs. In fact, this project is merely meant to replace the bufferprotocols of Goatee (the editor of McCLIM) and Portable Hemlock, in anattempt to ultimately merge those two projects. Climacs contributes (or will contribute) a few important things thatare not found neither in Goatee nor in Portable Hemlock: * A buffer protocol with a potentially very efficient implementation based on flexichains; * An `undo' protocol that is both general and powerful and that works on top of the buffer protocol; * An implementation of the association between multi-keystroke gestures and commands using nested CLIM command tables; * The possibility of having the buffer contain arbitrary objects. These will be rendered by the CLIM `present' function, so that they become clickable in the right context; * Syntax highlighting in the form of incremental parsers, especially for Common Lisp code. How to contribute-----------------

Discussion happens on the mailing lists accessible from<URL:http://common-lisp.net/project/climacs/>; arcives are likewiseaccessible. Contributions to make the framework and the editor anicer environment are actively sought.

What to work on---------------Climacs is a full CLIM application, and should take advantage of CLIMas much as possible, in particular for completion, presentations, etc.It is hard to resist the temptation to re-implement functionality thatis currently in Emacs but that really belongs either in CLIM or inseparate CLIM applications. In particular, we are NOT interested in: * Mail and News readers (see mel and Hermes) * A debugger (see the debugger pane of McCLIM) * An inspector (see the inspector pane of McCLIM) * Dired, Bufed, Shell mode, Calendar and other functionality that is best done as a CLIM pane or a separate CLIM applicationWe ARE however interested in the following items: * A grammar checker based on an incremental parser for natural languages * Incremental parsers for programming languages other than Common Lisp * A kill ring (perhaps the one from Portable Hemlock will do) * Indentation warnings for Common LispInstallation------------